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  2. Leading zero - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leading_zero

    Leading zeros are also present whenever the number of digits is fixed by the technical system (such as in a memory register), but the stored value is not large enough to result in a non-zero most significant digit. [7] The count leading zeros operation efficiently determines the number of leading zero bits in a machine word. [8]

  3. Find first set - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Find_first_set

    The count trailing zeros operation would return 3, while the count leading zeros operation returns 16. The count leading zeros operation depends on the word size: if this 32-bit word were truncated to a 16-bit word, count leading zeros would return zero. The find first set operation would return 4, indicating the 4th position from the right.

  4. Trailing zero - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trailing_zero

    However, trailing zeros may be useful for indicating the number of significant figures, for example in a measurement. In such a context, "simplifying" a number by removing trailing zeros would be incorrect. The number of trailing zeros in a non-zero base-b integer n equals the exponent of the highest power of b that divides n.

  5. Template:Trim leading - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Template:Trim_leading

    Trims up to six instances of <prefix> (such as: 0 or "anti-") from the beginning of <input>. <Prefix> is set to "0" by default (for removing leading zeroes from numbers). Template will not properly work beyond the first whitespace in the input.

  6. Truncatable prime - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Truncatable_prime

    A left-and-right-truncatable prime is a prime which remains prime if the leading ("left") and last ("right") digits are simultaneously successively removed down to a one- or two-digit prime. 1825711 is an example of a left-and-right-truncatable prime, since 1825711, 82571, 257, and 5 are all prime.

  7. Zero suppression - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zero_suppression

    An electronic calculator with zero suppression, showing 123 instead of 000000000123 Zero suppression is the removal of redundant zeroes from a number. This can be done for storage, page or display space constraints or formatting reasons, such as making a letter more legible.

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  9. 6174 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/6174

    All other four-digit numbers eventually reach 6174 if leading zeros are used to keep the number of digits at 4. For numbers with three identical digits and a fourth digit that is one higher or lower (such as 2111), it is essential to treat 3-digit numbers with a leading zero; for example: 2111 – 1112 = 0999; 9990 – 999 = 8991; 9981 – 1899 ...